Another
Braille Book Flea Market Success

by Peggy Chong

The
Braille Book Flea Market is a joint project of the National Association to Promote
the Use of Braille (NAPUB) and the National Organization of Parents of Blind
Children (NOPBC). It has been an annual event now for six years. Children and
parents alike look forward to this opportunity to attend a child-friendly event
where they can find quality children's books in Braille for their child. There
are no such events in their home communities, and many parents cannot afford
to buy Braille storybooks, or certainly cannot buy as many as their children
might like to have.

Plans for the Braille Book Flea Market that was held at our
national convention in Atlanta, Georgia, this summer began very early in the
year. Because our print/Braille storybooks were gone in just a few minutes at
the 2006 event, a call went out at the first of the year for print/Braille and
young reader books.

The
call was answered in many ways. Parents, libraries, and schools thought of us
when weeding out their collections, as they always do. But the exciting part
for me was that local chapters of the National Federation of the Blind (NFB)
and groups that NFB members belonged to took this on as a project and Brailled
countless print/Braille and young reader books for us this year. Many of the
transcribed storybooks were new copies made by volunteers who have attended
past Braille Book Flea Markets and have seen for themselves how excited the
children are about being able to pick out their very own books and take them
home to keep! The volunteers who helped unbox the books ooohed and aaahed over
the beautiful handmade books before putting them up for display. One special
source of books this year was from the children at this year’s convention who
attended Gail Wagner’s Braille storybook-making workshop prior to the flea market.
Over a dozen books were created and donated from this effort.

Many volunteers, including several students and staff from the
Iowa Department for the Blind, showed up at noon to unbox, sort, and set out
the tens of thousands of books sent to us in the past several months. UPS assisted
us with the gathering and transportation of the books before, during, and after
the event.

A
line began to form outside the room twenty minutes before the doors opened.
Eager parents and children wanted to be the first to look through the collection
of books on hand. When the doors opened, the rush of people spread all through
the room. Calls of “ Do you have any...” were heard throughout the room. Some
families who have done this before got smart. If they were looking for more
than one age group, the parents spilt up and scooped up what they could to take
to an empty spot in the room to sort by themselves. When books were put back
by one family, they were quickly scooped up by another.

Within an hour and fifteen minutes, almost all titles of books
were taken from the display tables. It took a bit longer for the line at the
tables where the books were shipped and labeled to go down. The hope was that
the books could beat the children home. This year, there was nothing left to
box up and save for next year.

While the children sorted through their treasures, they were
able to have a bit of supper, too. Hot dogs and lemonade were provided by the
NOPBC. That, too, was gone in short order. It was a great year, and we are already
looking forward to planning another great event in Dallas in 2008.